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South Sudan Sees FDI Rising to $1 Billion as Crisis Recedes

South Sudan Sees FDI Rising to $1 Billion as Crisis Recedes

(Bloomberg) -- Ten months of relative peace in South Sudan has triggered a rush of investment, raising inflows four-fold this fiscal year to an expected $1 billion.

Foreign direct investment for the nation that’s been in the throes of civil war was about $250 million in 2016-17, according to South Sudan Investment Authority’s secretary-general, Abraham Maliet Mamer. Statistics for 2017-18 are still being compiled.

“I am optimistic in 2019-2020 we will go beyond $1 billion if this peace prevails,” Mamer said in an interview in the capital, Juba, on Friday.

About 400 investors from Africa, Asia and Europe are looking at the country’s oil, mineral and agriculture industries, Mamer said. South Africa plans to invest $1 billion partly for oil exploration, and Johannesburg-listed MTN Group Ltd. will spend $30 million on its telecommunications network in the country, Mamer said. Investors from Dubai and Egypt have also expressed interest, he said.

The government will neither block dividend repatriation nor demand guarantee payments, investors will be entitled to five-year tax holidays and reinvested profits will be entitled to discounts, he said.

The agency wants all investors including those returning and long-established companies such as the local units of MTN and Zain Group to register and be issued investment certificates, Mamer said.

“Zain has not registered with us, what right do they have to take their money out? MTN has not registered with us, what right do they have to repatriate their money? They can’t,” Mamer said.

Zain obtained a South Sudan investment certificate at the end of 2018, a spokesman for the company said. MTN’s South Sudan head of corporate services, Khumbulani Dhlomo, said the company has a license and pays taxes.

To contact the reporter on this story: Okech Francis in Juba at fokech@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: David Malingha at dmalingha@bloomberg.net, Helen Nyambura

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